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BRITISH RULE AND ARAB–JEWISH COALESCENCE OF INTEREST: THE 1946 CIVIL SERVANTS' STRIKE IN PALESTINE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 2004

David De Vries
Affiliation:
A Senior Lecturer in the Department of Labor Studies, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel; e-mail: [email protected]

Extract

Historians have long recognized post-war Palestine as a society in a state of destabilization. Increasing tension between the population and the Palestine Mandatory government was reflected in political opposition and violence. This was accompanied by the growing role of the United States in the intensive debate on the future of relations between Arabs and Jews, as reflected in the decision in late 1945 to convene the Anglo-American Committee. The transition from a war economy to a period of reconstruction produced immense economic and social problems that added to increasing British debts, which was partly reflected in difficulties in absorbing former servicemen in to Palestine's economy and increasing unemployment of both Arabs and Jews. Destabilization was also made evident by increasing industrial unrest, focusing significantly on the state sector of the economy—the government bureaucracy, the railways, and the military camps. This post-war militancy was part of the economic and social impact of the war, the associated cycle of wartime labor strikes, and the increasing cooperation between Arab and Jewish workers in labor protest against the government.

Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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